CNA night shift??

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So i was given a call from a nursing home i applied to. Unfortunately the only openings are for the night shift and i was hoping to find something in the evening. The pay is very good! And this would be my very first cna job. Is nightshift easier like ive heard?? Or is it a bad choice? As i am a full time student im only planning on working 2 max 3 days a week
Anyone have any experience working the nightshift?? Good with school or bad?? Thanks in advance

At night you may have more sleeping pt's, but your workload is also way higher. Management figures you are doing less, so they give you more pt's. Fine if the night is okay, a nightmare if everyone is throwing up and having diarrhea. I have always done night shift, through many many years of schooling. You end up losing sleep, but otherwise gain hours!

I am a full time student and i work full time in a rehab/LTC facility on night shift. This is my first CNA job and I must admit that it has been quite a task. However I've been handling it much better than I thought I would have. I usually do have a higher patient load than the girls I day or evening shift would but I am also very thankful for the fact that I work on a rehab hall where most of my patients are asleep and don't need as much and the few changers I have I can manage all while getting some studying done. I usually get off work by 7 and the I'm in class by 8 and there until 12 or 1 everyday. It's hard work and takes a lot of discipline but I think if you feel like you can do it go for it. I didn't think I would make it but I've worked nights with up to 23 patients by myself and I've even worked the LTC hall which has 43 patients who are all changers and I've survived. I say go for it. I wish you all the best and congrats on your new job

I haven't started school yet (my pre reqs start next week) but I do work night shift as a CNA in my mind it CAN be more work, usually there is less employees so you have more patients so it can get crazy... but sometimes it's calm.

I am a CNA and currently work evenings at a LTC facility. I think that after supper, it's go time! Everyone has to go to BR and bed at like 8! We have two girls per +\- 30 residents. We are working on becoming EDEN in the future but I might not be there that long.

I've worked all three shifts, and to me night shift was the easiest on my body as far as lifting. It is hard to get used to the sleep schedule, which is probably the hardest part. The other thing is that at night some Residents can't sleep, and it's your job to try to keep tabs on them while taking care of 2-3 times the amount of people the day shift would take care of. Turning people in the bed, and toileting/changing them is not as bad as ADLs are during the day.

I worked the night shift a couple of times when I was at the LTC facility. In my experience, it's easier than the other shifts, with a more relaxed and laidback atmosphere. For the most part, it's just checking on the residents every few hours and turning/changing as needed, up until the last 2-3 hours when you start getting everyone up for the day shift, that's when it gets a bit hectic. But all in all the easiest and lowest-stress of the three shifts imo.

I currently work for a private hospital with the schedule of 3x per week for 7p-7a. I enjoy it with the exception of working with a whole bunch of miserable senior citizens who has been doing bedside nursing for 30 plus years, while I watch them eat their young (nurse graduates). Sad, but true.

I'm a student right now but I am a cca, I work full time nights. Nights are good as long as you're self-motivated. I am busy for my entire 12 hour shift starting with putting people to bed, getting laundry carts ready for the morning, cleaning up after the day staff. There are a lot of people, most are sleeping but I'm responsible to make sure everyone is dry in the morning, this means a lot of changes in the middle of the night. I want people to be looked after to my best ability, so I am on top of doing turns(q2h) and changes. Then to end our nights we have people who want to get up early and we get them up before we go.

Personally, I prefer working NOC over any other shift for many of the reasons cited above. Some nights are hectic, especially if there is a flu bug going through the unit; however, there seems to be a better dynamic in team members too.